I felt a bit of sadness particularly over Wes Montgomery's story, who had to dumb his talent and playing down in his later years, to play in a way that is more authentic so that he could get more fame and be able to make enough to raise his family. He played some kind of pop jazz in his later years, after his career pretty much came to a stop for awhile so that he could support his family any way he could during the racist 60's.

I second Chuck; such a harsh way to go. Layne Staley a bit; apparently when he died all his teeth had fallen out and he just sat around in his feces, playing videogames and spitting vitriol about his former bandmates. I realize heroin addiction starts with a conscious decision, but still... Harsh.

Quorthon, I never worked out why he lied so much.So Venom is the reason Bathory started? Nothing to be ashamed by there.Hammerheart started a whole sub genre, that's something to be really impressed by.

Also, it was a real case of hit and miss by the end of his career, maybe it was due to his drug addiction?Who knows but he sure as fuck didn't deserve to die from it.

You never knew what to believe about Quorthon, as far as his interviews and whatnot. I hadn't heard that he had a drug problem; but it would make sense considering he was pretty young to die of "heart failure" or whatever the official cause was.

The ones I feel the worst for are the ones who got screwed over by their former bandmates or by their record label, and these circumstances ended up destroying their career. Max Cavalera kind of got fucked over by the remnants of Sepultura, for instance. He was one of the two founding members, so in a way he got kicked out of his own band! Maybe Dan Lilker would be on that list- sounds like Anthrax fucked him over pretty good. I WOULD include Dave Mustaine on that list but I wont (i.e. he's a jerk, plus he's plenty successful in his own right.)

It's quite current, and probably won't do him any harm in the long-term, but I certainly have a ton of sympathy for John Baizley - A broken arm, a broken leg, and a premature end to a tour which would have been the first by a Baroness who had truly made it, as it were.

Also, agree on Quorthon. I haven't watched/read as many interviews as I should, but he seemed very...unfulfilled...in life.

Valfar (Windir). He wasn't hurting anyone, he wasn't doing anything wrong,; he just hiking to his family's cabin in the mountains when he was caught in a sudden snowstorm. On the other hand, I find such a death to be kind of respectable, and I suspect he would prefer dying that way to wasting away in a hospital room.

And I really feel bad for Mark Reale (Riot), because he WAS wasting away in a hospital room with a terrible disease. He seemed like a good guy, and Riot was experiencing something of a resurgence in popularity.

I have to mention Dio as well. He lived a full life, but 67 isn't that old, and I understand that stomach cancer is pretty agonizing.

Wesley Willis's story is pretty sad too. He struggled with his schizophrenia throughout his life, and he did the best he could with it by making music and drawing pictures. A lot of people laugh at him - he has some hilarious songs, after all - but he really was gifted, despite his illness. Just look at some of the drawings he did of various places in Chicago. He could see something once and draw it (accurately) from memory.

Valfar is my number one, at the height of my black metal phase... I discovered the awesome Windir with however few things they had then. Realized it was BM at its supreme finest.

I get back into metal after a hiatus for various reason, and find he died in most kvlt Norwegian way possible(Although probably a horrific way to go), but still... His music was amazing to me to this day, and I'm not even the biggest BM fan any more.

Dimebag Darrel thing was fucked up wasn't it?(Never read much, but didn't a fan just come on stage and straight shoot him? That's pretty fucked if I'm not totally mistaken,

Dimebag Darrel thing was fucked up wasn't it?(Never read much, but didn't a fan just come on stage and straight shoot him? That's pretty fucked if I'm not totally mistaken,

Yes. I didn't like the music at all but that was a very, very unfortunate situation. If you see the video, he just went in through the back of the gig, walked on stage and opened fire until he himself got shot.

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gomorro wrote:

Yesterday was the birthday of school pal and I met the chick of my sigh (I've talked about here before, the she-wolf I use to be inlove with)... Maaan she was using a mini-skirt too damn insane... Dude you could saw her entire soul every time she sit...

valfar died respectfully by a natural cause, he was part of one of the greatest viking metal/ black metal bands in history in my opinion.

varg i feel bad for, for alot of reasons. I think he is very insecure about alot of things today that alot of black metal musicians left behind in the 90's, that is just what I think based on alot of interviews and articles iv read about him from then to now.

demonaz I feel bad for him not being able to play guitar like he once did, i wasnt a huge fan of immortal's early work, but knowing you might not be ever able to improve at something you were once great at is a shitty feeling.

syd beret of pink floyd was an amazing musician, and him going out, mentally, i felt bad about. the early works he inspired were some of the best of pink floyd.

the last is a guy that was in my jazz guitar class, his name was rob keenan, excellent guitarist, alot older than me, definitely alot more progressive than me at learning, and he practiced alot more than I did. But a few weeks ago he was working and fell of a building, He suffered some major head injuries and brain damage, went into a coma for 12 days, and passed last Thursday. He was very healthy and active, and it really sucked to not see him before lessons, we usually talked about the music we'd been given, or soccer when the teacher came in. It really sucked he went out like that so early.

Man, totally forgot about Valfar. Yeah, I feel bad for him dying so young. He was hella gifted, and this "he died naturally and respectably" crap is retarded. He died in his 20s, leaving a pregnant wife all alone. Tragic.

You never knew what to believe about Quorthon, as far as his interviews and whatnot. I hadn't heard that he had a drug problem; but it would make sense considering he was pretty young to die of "heart failure" or whatever the official cause was.

Not really, I had a friend who had a heart attack at 28 or something, he's still alive though.

Fucking A! Totally and completely underestimated, and does not deserve to walk in mr. King's shadow. Especially, since - in my opinion - Hanneman is more competent than his partner.

Others I feel bad and sad for is the long past Per Yngve Ohlin aka DEAD from Morid/Mayhem. He seemed to be a pretty odd guy with lot of issues inside, he has stated he didn't belong here and to say he worshiped death is an understatement. He'd been bullied over many years, got beaten so severly he almost died at young age. And when he then started in Mayhem things got worse. Öystein aka Euronymous (guitarist) have been said to encourage and pushed him to kill him self, and left promise after promise to Dead that soon is our big break and the money'll be rollin'. Around the time of the suicide the two became more and more hostile against each other, Öystein is said to have been really mean (bad choice of word perhaps) and up in Dead's face all the time so occasionally he took his pillow and went out in the woods to get away from Öystein and get som sleep.

Also do I feel bad for Dimebag. He was taken from us way too early and had so much more to give. One person that absolutely didn't derserve death. At least he died on stage, doing what he loved...

Oh, and Quorthon of course!

_________________I'm a Swede so I hope ya'all have some forbearance if my English isn't top notch all the time.

Definitely Layne Staley. Nobody deserves what he went through, even if it was something he started going himself.

It's a shame as it destroyed his amazing voice and he died young in a horrible way, but Jerry Cantrell was also just as addicted to heroin. He'd spend weeks doing the same thing, just getting high and pissing in bottles. But he made it through.

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theposaga about a Moonblood rehearsal wrote:

So good. Makes me want to break up with my girlfriend, quit my job and never move out of my parents house. Just totally destroy my life for Satan.

You never knew what to believe about Quorthon, as far as his interviews and whatnot. I hadn't heard that he had a drug problem; but it would make sense considering he was pretty young to die of "heart failure" or whatever the official cause was.

Actually, Quorthon won his battle against drug addiction. And he was afflicted by heart weakness long time before the myocardial infarction. Heart failure, not drugs, killed him.

You never knew what to believe about Quorthon, as far as his interviews and whatnot. I hadn't heard that he had a drug problem; but it would make sense considering he was pretty young to die of "heart failure" or whatever the official cause was.

Actually, Quorthon won his battle against drug addiction. And he was afflicted by heart weakness long time before the myocardial infarction. Heart failure, not drugs, killed him.

Wasn't even the heart disease congenital? I believe I've read that in an interview with his father.

_________________I'm a Swede so I hope ya'all have some forbearance if my English isn't top notch all the time.

left promise after promise to Dead that soon is our big break and the money'll be rollin'.

That was that a threat right?

Sharp observation! Maybe that was Öysteins ulterior motive behind encouraging/driving Pelle to his suicide (if it's true, which I believe it was). He knew Mayhem would explode over the world with an event like that behind the band on top of all the other auras of mysticism the group had gained in their early years.

_________________I'm a Swede so I hope ya'all have some forbearance if my English isn't top notch all the time.